Mimestream is a new kind of email client powered by the Gmail API and built with the latest Apple technologies. The app brings together the best features of Gmail with the power of macOS, to let you fly through your inbox faster than ever before.
A native macOS email client for Gmail
Mimestream is a new kind of email client powered by the Gmail API and built with the latest Apple technologies. The app brings together the best features of Gmail with the power of macOS, to let you fly through your inbox faster than ever before.
Hi all! Today, we are excited to officially launch Mimestream: a new kind of email client built specifically for Gmail. Unlike other clients that use the IMAP protocol, Mimestream uses the Gmail API for a lightweight and zippy experience. This enables integration with many Gmail-specific features, like inbox categories, labels, filters, one-click calendar invitation responses, Gmail search operators, sending via aliases, synced signatures, fetching public Google profile photos, configuring vacat
Hi @neil_jhaveri! Congrats on your launch! 🚀 I'm curious to know what makes Mimestream stand out from Spark. Can you tell me more about it?
I have been using Mimestream for a while now and I must say, I am thoroughly impressed with it! Congratulations to @neil_jhaveri on a great release!
Congrats on the release, it's a very impressive piece of software. I've been using the beta on and off or a while and it's clearly very stable, fast and polished. However, I was very disapppointed by the decision to have only a subscription model for an email client, which my local currency exchange rate makes even worse. I miss the times when I could simply save up and purchase some software. Nowadays everyone wants $5 or more a month, which is unfeasible.
Been using the beta for over a year and never had an issue, so had to support the development. I realise scheduled messaging isn't available via the Gmail API, but I'd love to have support for this (via a mimestream server I guess).
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.
The scores reflect launch-period engagement. Historical data is preserved and doesn't change retroactively. The build date at the bottom shows when the index was last refreshed.